Fund awards $26,000 to small farms in area

Chickens walking through green grass near a yurt and apple trees.
Chickens walking through green grass near a yurt and apple trees.

The Olympic Peninsula Farmers Fund has awarded a total of $26,650 to seven small farms in Jefferson County so they can provide locally grown produce, meat, eggs, and dairy products to food banks and local feeding programs.

The fund was created as a partnership between the North Olympic Development Council, the WSU Extension Regional Small Farms Program, the North Olympic Land Trust and the Jefferson Land Trust to provide pre-paid, long-term contracts of $1,500 to $5,000 to farmers this season.

Farmers will in turn provide food for food banks and local feeding programs over the next three to five years.

Seven farms in Jefferson County received a contract: Red Dog, Midori, Spring Rain, Sunfield Land for Learning, Corona, and Mystery Bay farms.

“The [Tri-Area] Food Bank is located across the street from our farm and for a long time we’ve been working with the Food Bank as well as the people that manage it to try to get them to source more of their fresh produce locally,” said John Bellow, owner of Spring Rain Farm & Orchard.

“The whole point of our business is to provide food to our community. As a business we have to balance the books each year which puts some finite limits on how much we can donate to the Food Bank.”

This new contract means Spring Rain will receive funding needed to be able to give food directly to the Food Bank on a regular basis over the next five years.

Like many local businesses, farmers have been affected by the coronavirus pandemic. Farmers markets and restaurants make up more than half of a farm’s sales every year, according to the North Olympic Development Council (NODC).

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